l)e regcw 5tnjti0. w. i. toAHt, roiro aim rtoraisToa. oMoorr orrr i SATURDAY, AUGUST 16. 1858. f3T The Kditor it absent when lie re turns, correspondents, public and private, will bs attended to. Cessrttt Oregon ta W'aslstafUa, We have carefully gathered the follow ing nowt touching the intertill of Oregon and Washington Territories from file of ihe Congressional Clot. All ofthe bil'i reported below have been under considera tion by the IIuusc in Ccramit'eo of the Whole, and there ii a fair prospect of their being all paeicd at tome dy. The bill furadinitting Orogon as a State and for paying oar war debt, will hardly be got through tbia tension yet the thing Is baroly possible. A motion was made to adjourn July 29' b, but It was voted down. The following hastily arranged items will suffice for Congressional new la regard to Oregon. The I Iouso in Committee of tho Whole reported in favor of appropriating 8500 to each of the Territories of Oregon, Minne sota, Nw Mexico, Utah, Kmitsi, and Ne braska, for purchasing such atandaid legal works as may be wauled to complete the Territorial librsriea. Lane offered an amendment giving Oregon 82600 toward replacing her library which was burnt last winter. The amendment was voted down. A bill wns also reported appropriating $ 10,000 for computing a military road from Tt. Steilaeoom scrota tho Cascade to Ft Walla- Walla, aUo authorizing the Suereta ry of War to ascertain and pay the amounts expended by citizei, of Wellington Ter ritory in 1453 on as much of the road as was made from Fl. Steilaeoom to the moun tains by aaid citizens, and adopt the tame a part of said military mad ; provide! the sum docs not exceed (3,000. AUo a bill appropriating (40,000 for a Territorial capital at Olynipia, and (30,000 fur a pen itentiary at Vancouver. Alto a bill ap propriating $35,000 for a rnad between Ft. Steilaeoom and Bellingham Day. A bill was also reported in fiivorof appropriating (3000 towards paying clerk hire in the dices of Register and Receiver in Oregon City, the bills for said clerk hire to be pre sented to tho Secretary of the Interior with proper vouchers, verified by oath, iviih ac companying evidenco that such services were absolutely necessary for the trmisuc tinn of publio businese in euid offices. Also an appropriation for similar services in the Land Offices in Oregon, should such be found necessary, the sum of 8(3000, to be expruded under tho direction of the Sec retary of the Interior, at such points in aaid Territory as the publio interest may rrquiro ; the clerks to be paid by the day, aud fur such thuu as their services are ac tually required. Tho Committee of the Whole also hud undor consideration a bill authorizing the Secretary uf War to settle and pay the expends of the warof 1855-0 iu Oregon and Washington Territories, but came to no conclusion upon it. Ihe following resolution was passed by the House : "ftesolvtd, That Ilia President of Iht t.'iiiled Stales be requested lo coinniuniciits to this House any ciirrrssiiideiics or iiil'oriiialiuii which may have turn rtca.vtd by bun oil llit subject uf Indi nn lionlilitie in Oregon an i Washington Territories, nice tlio dst ol lira Inst cominiinicutiva lo the Horn on that subject." The saino bill which was parsed by the House lust Congtcss providing for the ad mlssiou of Oregon into the Union, was warmly debated by Jo Lane and Giddings on one tido and Jones of Tennessee and others against. Tho principal objections urged to tho bill were that Oregon had not a sufficient population, and had never asked for tho provision. Tho bill wsi finally laid over In order to take up the Kansas bill. A bill was also reported by the same com mittee making an appropriation .f 810,000 for completing the military road from As toria to Salem. AUo 830,000 for com pleting tho road from Myrtle Creek to Camp Stewart, and 30,000 fur completing the road from Myitis Crock toSuuttNburg, 9 The maiUteamoi Columbia reached Portland hist Sunday morning, bringing dales from New York to July 5. We are inducted to Wells, Fargo A Co.'s Express, and to J. W. Sullivan in S.m Francisco, fur filet of Slntet and California psners. The news is interesting. Tbeexcitomeutof the Presidential cam paign biJs fair lo equal that of 1940. Old Lino Whig and Democratlo papers all over the Nanh are wheeling into line for "Free Prr-w, Tree Speech, Free Labor, Free Territory, and FamoM." Fremont atanda square-toed upon platform recog niting not only the right but iho duty of the General tiovernineul to foster tuth a magnificent work as the ;rrt Pacific Rail road. Tho positive rufonl of tho Cincin nati Convention to adopt a similar plank in Ouchtniii'a platform vwll make seriously against hiui in California and tho wbule North. Tk ktixt S'.aiBwtttee of lavmUallti. This cuinmiltee has rvturmd to Wash ington, aud made a voluminous report, more thin contirming th shocking aree-unts ti La.'barilics couimii'cd in Kansas by the Missoarian. Mr. Mordecai Oliver, ure of the couimi'to, who will make a nu'noiity repurt, wsi proven hy the poll books in Kansas to have gent over to Kanias with Two awtasca Kaai kv list VUllaeesCesf saliua. San Francisco hat been the scene of ao other excitement. The Vigilance Com mittee were on the point of disbanding, when a man by the name of Joseph Ileth erington shot Dr. Randall in a difficulty at the St. Nicholas Hotel, on the evening of July 24th. Dr. Randall died the next day. Iletlerington was immediately taken by the Vigilance Committee, tried and bung on the 29th, together with Philander Brace, a young man who murdered Capl. West iu 1854, and ihesuppot'd murderer of Ma rionan accomplice two days afterward. Iletherington, in 1653, shot and killed Dr. Baldwin in San Francisco, in a dispute about the ownership of a piece ofland. It was estimated that there were not lest than 6000 men under arms, and the number of those who were endeetoiing to become spectators of the see no is set down at 20,000 the largest guibeiing ever witnessed in S.n Francisco. Several wooden buildings were to thickly covered with spectator! that they gave way under the accumulated weight. A number of persons were seriously injured but no lives were lust. Ma of Ort(a il asbtagloa. We have received fiom J. W. Trutch, Esq., Preston's sectional and county map uf all that part of Oregon and Washington Terriioiiet Witt uf the Cascade mountains. The map is neatly executed, and was com piled by Mr. Trutch, from the U. S. Land Offico Surveys. Pi ice f 3 to be had at Holland's and at Pope's in this city, and throughout tho Territory generally. mCoI. Jetmt Pipes. ..., Mr. Stephen C. Massett passed through our oily on Monday last, intending to give his Ballad concerts and Readings in Salem, Corvallia, and Albany. We wish him all success. Ilia contort in this city drew a crowded limit:', and delighted our people, and we understand he gives a farewell con cert here on next Tuesday evening. Absence from home during the most of lust week U our apulogy for not noticing his concert In this city on Tuesday night of Inst week. r- rtlakles. Mr. Genrgu Graham hat left in our offico uvenil samples of beets raised fifim seed sown last April, which average twenty-two niches in circumference. Tho beets were produced on the farm of Mr. G., some six miles eal of l Is its city. f3F We learn that U1 week, iu hoist ing freight frum tho steamer Purlhind into the warehouse 'f the Willamette Milling aud Transportation Company, the chain purled, letting the box contjining some thirteen hundred pounds of freight fall upon the guards of the boat, carrying them away, and fending the freight box with its entire contents to the bottom of the river. Tho accident came near sinking the Port- laud, but we are glad to learn that no seri ous damage wan done to the boat. GO" Business it qu'ne lively in this city nt present. The prospect is that if wc had good roads leading out into the cumry in every direction, our city would draw a large share of the trade that now goet to Portland. Almost every body that comes to town sculd about the "horrible roads." We intend lo fix ihem hv and hy. fc?" This ciiy would bo nn excellent lo cation just now fur a first-rate blacksmith who could do a neat job at ironing wagons and all o'hrr kinds of work. 0 We hear that several citizens of Marion county have gone crazy of late. The insanity U said to have been produced by "spirit rappinps." OT Apples are selling in this city fur 80,00 per bnahel. 0 "T P. T. Herbert, the member ol Con gress from California who alew Keating, an Irish waiter at Willard's Hutel, Wash ington, has been indicted for murder by the Uiand Jury of the District of Columbia, and locked up for trial. Na Vraactsce Prices. Flour 88 f0 to 15 ; Oats 2J cent ; Tola- toes 1 to 2 cts. per lib!, j Sugar, Ameri can crushed Uds, No. 1 China 9 eta. tor (At Ar gut. Mr. Editor -Dear Sia : Will the Geueral Government assume and pay our war debts I This is a question of momen tous interest to the people of this Territo ry. Generous and liberal in turning out their property for tho common defense, will the parent government rccogniza their claims and grant indemnity, or shall their loyally be weakened by an unjust refusal f As fur ourself we must o iufess that we have an unwavering tontidnce in the jus tice uf the gu eminent, and had it nut been for the simnge and anomaloue conduct of guvernmeiit officials we should never have had the shadow of aduuhton the auhj-ct. Planting uuraelves, however, on the justice of our claiinaand Ihe anieeedrtua of the government e demand the payment of these claims as a mailer of right. When has the guverumeiit refused to recognise and pay claims of a similar character f The expenses of the Florida wtr were wimt-tbiug uear t'iO.OOO.OOO. Did the 1'ieple or hesitate in its paymenll W answer, no. Tho expenses uf the Cay us and Kuae rivet warn were all ,Hid by the g ivcronient. I he history of the guvrra- meni furnishes cot a single exception to the rule. Her antecedeote have been ani fb'm and jt. Wi',1 :k government t!o late the principle of justice and equali'y upon which tbesa antecedents have been founded, and refuse to recognize our claims now Tb Injustice of such an act would be too marked and glaring. The people of this Territory do not ask of the govern, ment the assertion of a new and doubtful constitutional power, but simply the exer cise of a power universally acknowledged, and sanctioned by usage. To eccumpliih the ten lament of the Pa cific coast, to tecure it from the eager grasp of foreign powers, the government of the United States olTered large donaiious of land to Iu cititent. A goodly host of pat riotie and enterprising citizens, alter endur ing hardships unknown to the settlement of other portions of the American Union, have planted themselves with the insignia of their country in ita valleys and along iie Htreama. Have they been planted her by the aeductiont of the general government, and shall they not enjoy the tame righte that have been extended to their fellow-citizens, under like circumstances, liviug uear er the center of government I But it is said by government officials that the Rogue river war was commenced by the aggressiona of a few lawless white men. In substance, and in every particu lar, the assertion is untrue. But fur argu ment's sake let ua suppose it lo be true. It is not preunded that the citizens of Grave orei k llills, who felt the first terrible stroke of lavage vengeance, were the ag gressor!. What then I Because a few rockiest individuals invaded the rights of the Indians, must the Territorial govern ment look en aud see its innocent citizens butchered, their houses burned, and their property destroyed f Suppose that a com pany of American outlaws should invade the territory of Mexico, aud that Mexico in a spirit of retaliation should send an army into our settlements, muidar our citizens, sack our towns, and spread deaolatiun far far and wide around. Where la there a man to bane that he would not sustain our government in a declaration of war I And who would duubt the justice of such a war f But these wars were not mmenced by the aggressions of the whiles. The Indi ana, in every instance, were the aggressor. These wars grew out of tho treaties enter ed into by the Indians and the accredited agents of iiid general government, which treaties either have or wi.i receive the sanc tion of said government. Pleased win', tho gratification of his present wiiuts, and the profusion of the passing hour, and being by a law uf his nature reckless of the future, his fancy being powerfully excited by a gorgoous array of blankets and trinkets, the Indian yielded his cordial assent to treaties whose luture consequences to himself and his race he either did not or could not un derstand. But when the enchantment was over and he awoke to a realizing conscious ness of his position, he was dissatisfied. Dissatisfaction produced jealousy ; jealou sy hatred; and haired aoon found vent in open hostility. Such is the philosophy of our Indian wars. Nearly every one of them is in violation of treaty stipulations. These treaties are made by the general government sustained and defended by it. The general government ever has and ever ought io pay all the expenses. Again : It isun acknowledged principle uf law, and an established principle of jus tices, that the principal is bound by the agent in tho legitimate exercise of hit powers. Not a dollar's worth of property has been turned over to the government only by the express command of the ac credited agents of the government. Not a soldier has taken the field only in uhedieuee to the command oftaid agent. To have di-obeyed would have been to have set at dt fiance the authority uf the general gov. ernmont. To obey was to be loyal. If then the government, through its agents, commanded U", as loyal citizens, not only to tuku the field, hut to furnish for its use certain munitions of war fur the prosecu tion uf a war commenced by the murderous aggressions of Indians, in viulatiou of trea ties solemnly entered into by them and the government uf th Uuitnd Slates, how can said government in justice and honor re fuse to pay the expenses of said war I O. J. Salem, Aug. 4, 185t. Fort Haston, Aug. 2d, l,5fj. Mr. IT. X. Adams Dbar Sir: Tho command ol Maj. Laytou have most of them got in from following and routing the Indians. He intends to march them to the Valley, where they art anxious to ground i heir weapons, and let those who say there is no war here take charge of afTaire, and fix them up to their own taste. I do not aim in thi letter to clear the volunteers of doing anything wrong, or make out that they are perfect; far from it but because there wore "tome few evil disposed persons among them, all should not be censured on account of a few. Should ninety good men be punished b. cause ten had done wrong I hope not. If this were th case, aui Gen. John E. Wool were the reporter, th volunteers would stand a bad show indeed. Of this all must be well awar who have read his leuer to the tnonal Intelligencer. He would rather grind them under hit hetl ere it in hit power than have them paid oT as they deserve. For my psri, 1 look for belter things frOm Congress. 1 have a belter opinion of Ihe Government than tbal il will pan ti by slightfj, as though we wre tindritrrnj. Time will work it all right, if otticsrs don't. Truth It mighty, snd will prevail. All will be brought to admit that the roluottert have done ex ceedingly well, when they know all th facts; called out at a season of ihe year the most inclement, not more than blf dad, and exposed to the rain and snow for the want of tents to make them comfortable, some of whom bare sacrificed their health and shortened their lives turn for insiance your attention to the lat lamented Maj. Chinn; he doubtless sscrificed his life by being exposed to the inclemency of the weather, doing Lis duty, and sullering without a murmur, Iiis is one example among many who are aa true perhap and faithful at there are in the Regular service ; yes, sir, men who have a heart to feel, and an arm to save or peii.h in the attempt when helpless women and ino'icent chil dren are struck down hy the ruthless hand of a savage tribe, aud blood ia being shed on every part of our border who would go out at once to meet them, instead of furling up in comfortable quarters nil th weather is more favorable, especially when the danger is most threatening. Behold the contrast. The volunteers were called out at the request of a United Slates officer at a time when Maj. Mallei was surrounded by Indians, so repotted What was the result? Whs it not ie- tnondrd to most nromntlv I There wss a grand rally, and, like old Davy Crocket, sure ihey were right they wciitaheud, pay or no oay, to the relief of those in distress. But haply Maj. Duller with most of his command made good his ecnpo before the volunteers arrived at their destination. Then Ihey eUrted in pursuit. Maj. Chinn found out when he arrived on the Uma'illa that the Indians wero about one thousand s'rong, and were fortified at Fori Walla Walla, lie asked for two pieces of cannon to enable him to dislodge them, and was refuted, and moreover upbraided with ma king war upon friendly tribes, which the people may form their own opinion about I fur one regret that there has been so lit tie unison aud ao much hostility existing between the Regulars aud Volunteers in prosecuting this war. Yours in haste, W. G. From tlx New York Herald Tbt CamyatgaSy tnploms of a Great Poju lar IVevolulloa. The trials and tribulations of the old party hacks all over the country the fam i!y jars among thu wrangling dnmocracy the ias feeble i'C-ks of Know Nothiugism the lidiculous ureteiisions of wo'jld-he Presidents and party leaders, and thu tre mendou popular furore with which the numoof Fremont is everywhere received, are acts among the "signs of the limes" furttellirg an impending revolution in our political atHiiis, radical, overwhelming and complete. Here iu New York the old feud between the hards and softs, which il was supposed had been patched up at Cincinnati strong enough at least to hold like an old pair of breeches till after the election, has been rip ped open again at Albany. The hatds wish to be master, aud the softs stick to their divine right to rule. Meantime, dis gusted with the Cincinnati "ipecao pint form," many of the old Jackson Van Buren Bourbons have not only thrown it up, but have gone over with all their worldly goods aud hopes of salvation to Fremont. Oth ers will follow insubordination rages iu the soft division of the democratic camp, and all tho ellorts in this metropolis of Fer nando Wood, of the hards, and John Coch rane, of the softs, to restore the two factions to their ancient condition of brotherly love at the "Pewter Mug," will probably be "love's labor lost." Il is already high lime to call out Captain Ryndcrs, with Ins bar moiiizing six pounder, for the purpnvx of firing signal guns of distress until Gou-rn-or Wise, of Virginia, shall cme up to the rescue. If any man can reconcile the Van Buren faciiull to a full surrender In the i III placable Dickinson faction, ilia Mr. Wise. The ex-President at Kinderhook, for certain Congressional services heretofore rendered by Mr. Wise, is under everlasting obliga tions to him, and can deny him nothing. The case is now urgent, and Mr. Wise should be sent for without further loss of time. Perhaps his estimates of ihe aslun ishingriso in ihe price of niggers wiih the election uf Mr. Buchanan may exert a whole some influence among our rebellions soft shells, who are still ready, however, for any speculation whereby to lum an honest pen uy. Something must be done for the New York democracy or their case will be past praying for before the expiration of the dog days. Next we turn to Missouri, and find a similar division there in the democratic camp. Col. Benton, the anti-adoiinistra.. tion ami secession democittic candidate out there for Governor, has opened the cam paign with the most caustic pungent and merciless philippic agaiust Mr. Pierce, his Cabinet, his administration, hia foreign and domestic policy, the Cincinnati Convention and the Cincinnati platform the most ter rible dissection that the whole concern, from Washington to Cincinnati, has ever yrt experienced. Benton goes for Buch anan, but rtsvet him not a plank to stand upon, nor a rop to hold by. The danger i that these demoralizations arnong the democracy in New York an J Missouri, (to sy Rothing of the poorly tli-guised symp toms of this Contested mutiny in ibecamp elsewhere.) may, unless promptly arrested ext.nd to other Sutes, snd ulUrli- break ud the escalations of Sir. Forney, of a smooth and decisive victory in novemoer. Among the outside factions of the op. position there Is likewise good deal sf fuaa and flummery, very much like ihat of a fusy old hen over one thicken. Thu the Fil more Know Nothings are fussing and floundering about here and there, with their "American candidates" and "Ameri csn principles," when they ought to re member that their Hark lantern, on motion of Mr. Bone, was pu oi't month ago. Thus Commodore Stockton, nominated by a convention for the whole of which there woulJ be plenty of room in an omuibua, Is fusting sod cackling, over In Jersey, a If there were a house on fire, lie calls out su'Mianiially to Mr. Fillmore "The Union is in dangor. Do you think you can savs il IfyuU can, I will step aside if not, I must keep the field fur ihe Union must bo saved." Mr. Fillmore substauiiMlly rioiids "American principles can alone save the Union 1 am the regular Amri. can candidate. I s'aild fast, b- cause thu Union is in danger, and it must be saved." In one ofthe nullification speeches of the late Mr. McDuffie, ofSuuih Carolina, he Mid" When I hear a Northern man cry, 'the Union the Union the glorious Union,' thinks I hear the biiglo bhit ofthe rob ber band ; but h-n I hear a Southern man Cry -ihe Union the Union oh ! the glorious Union,' tm lhinkt I snuff treason in the minted gale." McDuffie was a nul litier ; but still there ia a great deal uf hum bug in this politician's ry of "the Union the Union there ia danger to the Union." All the disappointed old party hacks Pierce, Douglas. Fillmore, S ockton, and all the rest, including even Benton among the number would have ua believe that the U'tiun is in peril, and that the election of Fremont, fnmi the sectional platform which he copies, will result in an explosion as disastrous to all concerned as the burst ing of an old burnt out steamboat boiler in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean. All gHiiinmn moonshine humbug. Wc have had one President especially elected to save the Union, and that was Franklin Pierce. The American people are not apt to bn tak en in and done fur the second time with the aume trick. The Union-saving trick has been pretty wull ue' d up by Mr. Pierce, lie seems to have taken particular pains and pleasure to show us all the mortifying extent of the deception. To ask tba elec tion of Mr. Buchanan, on the same plat form nnil the same policy, is like adding in. suli to injury, and rubbing it in. Still, we are met wih iho plea thai this republican party is purelv s c'ioual iIihi tliey dare not run an electoral ticket in any Southern State. Why not f They do i ot propose to touch tin nati'ution i.f slavery in any State, nor iu the District of Columbia, nor the fugitive slave law. What const i tutional impediment ia there, then, to a Fremont electoral ticket in every Southern State in t he Union. There is this difficulty the Northern republican party dechire that Kansas shall be admitted in slits Union as a free State, and that Southern slavery ahull be excluded from all the other Terri tories uf ihe Union. To this extent ilii party ia a sectional party, hut not more so than the democratic party, whose policy is the extension of slavery. Rut there are other causes than slavery, and oilier sentiments, broader and deeper than the Kansas question, now al work among thx Northern masses, us ihey would be among the Southern masses, in behalf ofFreninnt. were this war of extermination between the abolition squatle'S and ihe Kansas border ruffian out of the way. Our old fogy Kliticians are behind the movement", exigencies and impuUes of the age. New men, new measures, new forma and retrenchments in a word, a new and sweeping rufo' inaiiuii ufall the existing political and party abuses of ihe day are demanded, and the people are in motion lo effect it. Mr. Fillmore, just returned from the echoes of the ''Miserere'' in the church of Si. Pit r at Komn, anil from the smoke of Mount Vesuvius, it not expected as yt-i to see through this thing. But ho is al ready getting a glimpse of his situation ami wji comprehend it pretty thoroughly after a week' lest and study of the news papers at Buffalo. It was so manifest here among us, nearly twelve months ago, that a new, fn sh man was the article for 18 )7, that wo trotted out George Law upon the track ; but "Live Oak George," lacking th back bone for the crisis, broke down at Philadelphia; and so they have taken him off, rubbed him down, and trotted him iu again for a more thorough trainin" for 1800. 1 he ntHf mMf however, for the crisis, ap pears to have been hit upon by a sort of popular spontaneous combustion with the nomination of Fremont. At John Van Bu ren would tay, in hit graphio ttyle or de livery, "he runs like the cholera." To the old stagers this is a mystery. They can not comprehend iu The old Martinets of Europe would have it that the "Little Cor poral" was a poor Captain, because bis sys tem of fighting whs in violation of all the ruleaof war. Vet he continued to beat ihem as they were never beat before. So with Fremont. He is $ much an enigma to all our old party Martinets and backioora committees. Fillmore is incredulous Siockton is dixgusted, and the "old liners' arnong th democracy, (excepiinr, perhaps. "old Buck," quietly smoking his segar at ttlieatlaod.) look upon this young colt from the Rocky Mountains with murder ous suspicion. They are taid to bs con cocting a lot of affidavits at Washington, hich will crush him aa effectually at "tb Coffin Handbills'' sallied the business for General Jackson. 1 Considering all these things, and the popular revolutionary movements of the last three years, which exhibit thu jmo crtlic party in the startling minority 0f nearly half a million vote, w cannot shut our eye to the fact that a comprehensive revolution has been, continue, and Will continue at work, nntil ita work it eomplet. ed. We want this revolution J we mutt have this revolution ; we shall hav tii. revolution carried out not only to the es tablishment of a new sot of men in power at Wa-hington, but extended to the reforma tion of all those villiunous party corruptions stealings, thimble-rigging, bullying, swindling and murdering which have drieu the people f San Francisco to the last resort of arms and open war. Kansas and the slavery issue, we repeat, form bat part of this Presidential agitation. The elementary principles of an honest admin istration of publio affairs ; a general spirit of revolt against the unblushiug ratcslitict of parties and party huckster! and niana. gert. as they now exist ; a general loath ing of the worn out old party hacks of the day, and a general desire for something new, clean, fresh, and uncontaminatcd by the tricks of pai ty cabala aud thieving spoilt, men, are all visible in thia tponianiout pop. ular movement f r Fremont. At such a time there ia no room for any of those whim peiingold grannies, with their humbugging cry uf "Save the Union." Let them clear the track, and save themselves. t3T We find in the N. Y. Ilsrald ihe fullowiiig speech delivered at an enthuiiat io Fremont ratification meeting in N. Y. city, June 25th, by Frances IS. Kimball, Attorney General of Ohio. Fejlow citizens 1 do not come before you at this late hour (10:15) so much for the purpose of making a speech as from a sincere desire that the voice of Ohio should bs heard on this great occasion. Ohio, the, third Stale in the Union. Ohio, which has elected that great statesmen and firm defender of freedom, Salmon P. Chase (cheers) as hbr chief magistrate. Ohio, which has a Congressional delegation that presents a firm anti-Nebraska front. (Loud cheers.) The appearance of the contest is favorable to us of the republican party, and with John C. Fremont (cheers) as our next President for I fully believe tbst he will be elected (loud sheers) we shall have another in the regular apostolic succession of republican Presidents, lie will be a worthy successor of Washington, Adams, J"ff rson. and Monro. (Cheers.) For thia is not a new party. The first republican party in this commiiiii y was formed at in I. pendente Hall, in Philadelphia, in 1770. (L u I cheers.) And if any mats doubt that our party ia identical in princi ple with that, I will refer him to our plat form, w hich is a reiteration of the decla ration of Independence. Aud i don't think any man can ls found whuibj cist -that ilocnm. lit, unless it tm hill) that Tom Ren ten calls "dirty dog, Pettil, of ludiaiia." (Laugh'er aud Hpplause.) Yes, fellow citiz' ns, oiirplaif.trin ia founded upon those eternal truths upon which 'his government was established I hat its aim was lo secure to all the p ojile of the. United Slates life, I'b rly and thefu soit of happiness. Ther epiiblicun plait' urn is fouutlud upon the roek of truth, and il cannot bu gainsaid. (Cheers.) Now, look at i hat other d'cu ineut mad. up al Cincinnati. It applauds squatter sovereigHi v. Now, what is squat lersoveieignty in Kansas? Why it means simply that tho squatters shall live in Kan aa's, and the sovereigns shall come over fiom Missouri. (Applause and laughter) It is the doctrine thut ihe majority shall en slave the minority, and the minority shall have no rights at all. If a majority of this meeting should re-olve lo enslave the mi nority, would the minority submit t We might as well be ihe slaves of ihe Czar of Russia as to be under the whip of this bor der ruffian id mocracy. Their platform is a miserable cheat and a sham. The issue ia a clear on', between the friends of free dom on one side and the border ruffian de mocracy on the other. Our platform is founded upon and reiterates the principles of the, Declaration of Independence; snd we have a candidate of whom we are proud. (Cheers.) They ask ua what Fremont has ever done I will tell you what he has not done. Ho has never signed the Ot. tend circular. Ho never, as Secretary of Stiit", gave up a large portion of Oregon to the U i ish. But he has twice added a Siae to the Uniou. ( Loud cheers.) Once by cuiqiiering it from a fo (cheers) and by freeing it from t tie errasp of the slave oligarchs. (Loud cheers.) He hat made long marches through the Western part of our country, where the star of empire now lakes its way. (Cheers.) lie has made known to us the vast resources of that por tion uf the republic. (Applause.) These are the men we wa:it. The gentleman whd hat just addressed yon (Mr. Emmet) said it was a myeirry to him how Mr. Fremont enme to b nominated at Philadelphia. Il is no mystery to me. The people always know their man. They know him, a Fat staff did the true prince, by instinct. (Laughter and applause) They knew Fr moot by bis sots, by his achievements, and that is all they want to know. (Cheera.) The opposition may ask who John C. Fre mom is. So the British asked who George Washington was." (Applause.) The Brits ish found out who he was, and so will the border ruffian democracy find ont who Fre mont is. The speaker then referred to the democracy, who, ho taid, had rejected all their old principles, one by one, s the housewife takea away the eggs of a goose, leaving her a stone to ait p So its with the democracy. They have gradually taken every principle away and put thia Nebraska stone in the aest. (Load sp ptaue.) . l.i. - ' A Voice And hutched a fillibutUfc A.toTRCi Voice Some light on the goose question. Mr. Kimball Now, what has Mr. Buch anan ever done ) A Voice Sigwed the Ostend circular. Mr. Kimball lie has beea bangmg about, fatu-uing on the public crib, for for ty years, and has never done a good thing yet. Luriag the- affaintstra'ioa of Mr.